cover image Ernie: The Autobiography

Ernie: The Autobiography

Ernest Borgnine, . . Kensington/Citadel, $24.95 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-8065-2941-7

Oscar-winner Borgnine reflects on a career spanning six decades and totaling more than 190 film and television roles. After a nomadic childhood (Connecticut to Chicago to Italy), Borgnine, born in 1917, returned to Connecticut for high school. Following 10 years in the navy, he studied drama at Hartford’s Randall School and began acting at Virginia’s Barter Theater, advancing to live TV and Broadway roles. His striking performance as the sadistic Fatso in From Here to Eternity (1953) catapulted his career, and two years later he won an Academy Award for his portrayal of the lonely Bronx butcher in Paddy Chayefsky’s Marty . In the 1960s, he was reluctant to do a TV series until an encounter with a teen who recognized Borgnine but couldn’t name any of his films prompted the actor to immediately do the TV series McHale’s Navy . Summoning up on-set movie memories, Borgnine unleashes an arsenal of anecdotes, such as Joan Crawford’s hatred of Mercedes McCambridge: “Joan thought she was mocking her... and she let fly a fusillade of insults like I’ve never heard, not even in the Navy.” With astute observations on the Hollywood hierarchy and tales about everyone from Lee Marvin and Steve McQueen to Bette Davis and Kim Novak, he writes with an unassuming, no-nonsense tone. His love of filmmaking and his respect for his fellow actors permeates the pages of this engaging and satisfying memoir. (Aug.)